Dental haemorrhage
Persistent bleeding from a tooth socket after dental extraction may be due to:
- reactionary haemorrhage - seen after 2-3 hours as the local anaesthetic wears off
- secondary haemorrhage - seen after 48-72 hours, if the clot becomes infected. This is more likely if the previous dental hygiene has been bad.
Check:
- that the bleeding is coming from a tooth socket
- pulse, BP and for signs of shock if the bleeding has been significant - transfusion is sometimes required
- predisposing factors, to be followed up later, include:
- hypertension
- drugs such as warfarin or aspirin
- blood dyscrasia, haemophilia or ITP
Reference
- Prashanti E et al. Interventions for treating post-extraction bleeding. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Mar 04;3(3):CD011930
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